By default, arch has the {{ic|getty@tty1}} service enabled. The service file already passes {{ic|--noclear}}, which stops agetty from clearing the screen. However [[systemd]] clears the screen before starting it. To disable this behavior edit {{ic|/etc/systemd/system/getty.target.wants/getty@tty1.service}} and set {{ic|1=TTYVTDisallocate=no}}.

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By default, arch has the {{ic|getty@tty1}} service enabled. The service file already passes {{ic|--noclear}}, which stops agetty from clearing the screen. However [[systemd]] clears the screen before starting it. To disable this behavior edit your getty service file and set

Revision as of 19:38, 4 September 2013

After the boot process, the screen is cleared and the login prompt appears, leaving users unable to read init output and error messages. This default behavior may be modified using methods outlined in this article.

Note that regardless of the chosen option, kernel messages can be displayed for inspection after booting by using dmesg or all logs from the current boot with journalctl -b.

Using flow control

This is basic management that applies to most terminal emulators, including virtual consoles (vc):

Press Ctrl+S to pause the output

And Ctrl+Q to resume it

Note: This pauses not only the output, but also programs which try to print to the terminal, since they'll block on the write() calls for as long as the output is paused. If your init appears frozen, make sure the system console is not paused.

Have boot messages stay on tty1

By default, arch has the getty@tty1 service enabled. The service file already passes --noclear, which stops agetty from clearing the screen. However systemd clears the screen before starting it. To disable this behavior edit your getty service file and set

/etc/systemd/system/getty.target.wants/getty@tty1.service

TTYVTDisallocate=no

Late KMS starting may still cause the first few boot messages to clear. If this is the case, try enabling early KMS start.

There will probably be too many boot messages to view on one screen. Use Shift+PgUp/PgDown to scroll. If there are too many boot messages you still might not be able to see all of them by scrolling. Try increasing the size of your scrollback buffer.

Disable clearing in /etc/issue

If you have an old /etc/issue that has the "clear TTY" escape sequences, remove them.